How 1 balloon nearly stopped the bomb
Posts: 41
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 3:36am
In 1944, the US atomic bomb program, the Manhattan Project was driving toward the first nuclear weapon in human history. 3 Major sites were providing the resources, the most famous being Los Alamos, New Mexico; a uranium enrichment plant in Hansford, Washington State and a Plutonium developing facility in Oakridge, Tennesse.

Each was crucial to the success to the sucess fo the final project. As we all know, the project was a sucess and 2 bombs were dropped on japan, ending the Pacific portion of WWII.

However,

Did you know a lucky "Balloon bomb" almost caused a reactor meltdown at the Hansford site. You see, in 1943 and 1944, the Japanese blindly relaesed 9,000 high altitude paper ballons in the Pacific jetstream. Completly unguided, one of these bombs nearly changed World War II. The bomb hit the Hansford's site's main generator, shutting off its reactor coolants system, and had untested saftey protocols not worked perfectly, a reactor meltdown and irrevicable damage would have occured to the US atomic bomb program.

Thats pretty amazing.
Posts: 4025
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 3:39am
I didn't know that. The only thing I knew about the balloons was that one of them killed an entire family having a picnic in Oregon.
Posts: 5387
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 3:48am
Did you know that shotly following World War Two, America deployed (covertly) nuclear weapons into Japan so as to have a nuclear arsenal closer to Russia?

I just found that out today.

Amazing, how close we keep coming to global catastrophe.
Posts: 1109
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 9:10am
someone's gonna fire soon...
Posts: 2414
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 2:08pm
How close we KEPT coming.
Posts: 1913
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 3:17pm
How close we KEEP coming. Unneccesarily.
Posts: 1772
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 4:10pm
Source?
Posts: 1109
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 8:43pm
yeah. That would be more believable.
Posts: 5387
  • Posted On: May 3 2004 11:56pm
WASHINGTON (December 13, 1999) -- For more than 40 years, the United States has kept secret the fact that it once deployed nuclear weapons on two Japanese islands, Chichi Jima and Iwo Jima, according to an article in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ January/February 2000 issue. The article, by three noted nuclear weapons analysts, is a follow up to their article in the November/December 1999 Bulletin about the history of the deployment of U.S. nuclear weapons in 27 countries and territories around the globe.

The authors conclude that though the United States technically abided by Japan’s “non-nuclear” principles, the non-nuclear status of the country was fundamentally undermined. Japan was fully integrated into U.S. nuclear war plans, nuclear warheads were deployed on the three Japanese islands of Chichi Jima, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, components were stored on the Japanese mainland, and nuclear weapons were routinely present on U.S. ships and submarines calling at Japanese ports. “Japanese post-war nuclear history is now only becoming clear,” said co-author William M. Arkin. “An elaborate contraption was built to accommodate Japanese nuclear sensitivities, but none of it meant that Japan truly escaped the potential effects of a nuclear war.”

In the article, “How Much Did Japan Know?,” the authors show that the scale of Japanese involvement in the U.S. nuclear infrastructure was much larger than has ever been known. Ambiguity, secrecy, silence and ignorance were the ingredients of the policy. Japan’s non-nuclear policy was largely fictitious, and it allowed the U.S. military to optimally base its weapons to wage a nuclear war against the Soviet Union and China.

“There was some unfinished business from the first article,” said co-author Robert S. Norris. “There was the question of identifying a mystery site that came alphabetically between Canada and Cuba, and there also was the fact that we incorrectly identified Iceland as a nuclear storage location. We now know that Chichi Jima is the “C” location and that Iwo Jima is the real “I” location, and we have the ‘smoking gun’ documents to prove it.”

The United States stored nuclear weapons and/or components on the two occupied Japanese islands from 1956 to 1966. Using newly discovered documents from the National Archives and elsewhere, the authors also show that even after the Pentagon had withdrawn nuclear weapons from Chichi Jima and Iwo Jima when the islands reverted to Japan, military planners wanted to use the islands as secret storage sites for nuclear weapons if World War III broke out and other bases were destroyed.

Additionally, the article reveals for the first time that the United States and Japan signed a secret agreement in 1968 enabling the U.S. military to store nuclear weapons on the two islands in the event of an emergency. According to co-author William Burr, “This agreement was an important precedent for a similar nuclear storage arrangement reached in 1972 when the U.S. returned control of Okinawa to Japan.”


Where they were: How much did Japan know?
Posts: 1772
  • Posted On: May 4 2004 4:46pm
Thanks, Ahnk.